Evolutionary game design : automated game design comes of age


Autoria(s): Browne, Cameron B.
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

The "Humies" awards are an annual competition held in conjunction with the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference (GECCO), in which cash prizes totalling $10,000 are awarded to the most human-competitive results produced by any form of evolutionary computation published in the previous year. This article describes the gold medal-winning entry from the 2012 "Humies" competition, based on the LUDI system for playing, evaluating and creating new board games. LUDI was able to demonstrate human-competitive results in evolving novel board games that have gone on to be commercially published, one of which, Yavalath, has been ranked in the top 2.5% of abstract board games ever invented. Further evidence of human-competitiveness was demonstrated in the evolved games implicitly capturing several principles of good game design, outperforming human designers in at least one case, and going on to inspire a new sub-genre of games.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/82412/

Publicador

ACM

Relação

http://delivery.acm.org/10.1145/2600000/2597454/p3-browne.pdf?ip=131.181.251.132&id=2597454&acc=ACTIVE%20SERVICE&key=65D80644F295BC0D%2ECE8691788DF0BE02%2E4D4702B0C3E38B35%2E4D4702B0C3E38B35&CFID=637846103&CFTOKEN=43143374&__acm__=1426030979_b41a6b4f68a75508a59b9824c66a6818

DOI:10.1145/2597453.2597454

Browne, Cameron B. (2014) Evolutionary game design : automated game design comes of age. SIG EVOlution: Newsletter of the ACM Special Interest Group on Genetic and Evolutionary Computation, 6(2), pp. 3-16.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 ACM

Fonte

School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #Game design #General game playing #LUDI #Evolutionary game design
Tipo

Journal Article